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Article 1 - Recognition, Coverage
& Jurisdiction
Article 2 - Union
Membership
Article 3 - Hiring, Retention And Career
Development
Article 4 - Information
Article 5 - Grievance Procedure
Article 6 - Guild/Management Meetings
Article 7 - Security
Article 8 - Severance Pay
Article 9 - Retirement & Investment
Savings
Article 10 - Transfers & Promotions
Article 11 - Hours & Overtime
Article 12 - Holidays
Article 13 - Vacations
Article 14 - Sick Leave & Insurance
Article 15 - Leaves of Absence
Article 16 - Part-Time And Temporary
Employees And Interns
Article 17 - Minimum Salary
Classifications
Article 18 - Wages
Article 19 - Safety & Health
Article 20 - Educational Assistance
Article 21 - Expenses &
Transportation
Article 22 - Bylines & Corrections
Article 23 - Management Rights
Article 24 - No Strike/No Lockout
Article 25 - General Provisions
Article 26 - Employee Records
Article 27 - Drug & Alcohol Testing
Article 28 - Duration and Renewal
Contractual Side Letters
2002-2004 Contract
2005-2008 Contract
AGREEMENT
Between
JOURNAL SENTINEL INC.
And
MILWAUKEE NEWSPAPER GUILD
(LOCAL NO. 51)
JANUARY 1, 2009, THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2011
This Agreement is made between Journal Sentinel Inc., a corporation,
hereinafter known as the Employer, and the Milwaukee Newspaper Guild, a
Local (#51) chartered by The Newspaper Guild-Communications Workers of
America (AFL-CIO, CLC), hereinafter known as the Guild, for itself and
on behalf of all employees of the Employer described in Article 1.
ARTICLE 1 - RECOGNITION, COVERAGE AND JURISDICTION
SECTION 1
The Employer recognizes the Guild as the sole and exclusive
bargaining agent for the purposes of collective bargaining with respect
to rates of pay, hours and other terms and conditions of employment for
all employees covered by this Agreement.
SECTION 2 This Agreement covers all employees
of the Employer in the Journal Sentinel News department, including the
News Information Center, and all producers, editorial designers, and
other editorial and clerical employees in the online service, except as
provided in Section 3.
The parties understand that the National Labor Relations Board
(NLRB) in its certification of June 11, 1984, and in subsequent
decisions, described the unit as follows: All full-time and regular
part-time Editorial department employees (including artists and
photographers assigned to the newsroom), News Information Center
employees and Madison Bureau employees of Journal Sentinel Inc.,
excluding all other employees of Journal Sentinel Inc., the Washington
Bureau employees, confidential employees, managerial employees, guards
and supervisors as defined in the Act. The parties agree that the term
"Editorial department employees" is properly interpreted to include
employees of the photo laboratory/studio and producers, editorial
designers, and other editorial and clerical employees in the online
service.
SECTION 3
The following are excluded from this Agreement:
JOURNAL SENTINEL NEWS - Editor, Managing Editor,
Editorial Page Editor, Deputy Managing Editor/Local News; Deputy
Managing Editor/Features, Entertainment and New Products; Asst. Managing
Editor/Sports, Asst. Managing Editor/Visual Journalism, Asst. Managing
Editor/News Operations, Asst. Managing Editor/Business, Asst. Managing
Editor/Administration.
Senior Editor/News, Senior Editor/Local News, Senior
Editor/Projects and Enterprise, Senior Editor/Sports, Senior Editor/News
Systems.
Asst. Local News Editors (3), Director of Photography, Graphics Editor,
Copy Chief, Deputy Business Editor (1), Asst. Features and Entertainment
Editor (1).
Employees in Washington Bureau, Administrative Assistant to Editor,
Editorial Page Administrative Assistant, Interns.
ONLINE SERVICE - Editor, Interns.
The Employer will promptly notify the Guild of any
changes in the titles of listed excluded positions. No new excluded
positions will be created without simultaneously deleting the same
number of excluded positions from the current list.
The Guild reserves the right to bargain on the creation of
excluded positions. Accordingly, the Employer and the Guild will each
designate an exclusions coordinator to administer the provisions of this
section. Before the Employer changes the titles of positions on this
list or adds any positions to this list, the Employer's exclusions
coordinator or designee will meet with the Guild’s exclusions
coordinator or designee to determine how the provisions of this section
should be applied. The parties will make a good-faith effort to reach
agreement before the changes are announced to the staff. The requirement
for prior consultation will not apply to new excluded positions that
the Employer proposes to replace any of the four highest-ranking
positions (currently Editor, Managing Editor, Deputy Managing
Editor/Local News and Editorial Page Editor) in the departments covered
by this Agreement.
The exclusion of the following position will not be used as
precedent for excluding any similar positions from the bargaining unit:
Editorial Page Administrative Assistant.
The language of this section, concerning notification of changes
in the titles of listed excluded positions, is designed to apply to
positions whose title is changing, but whose responsibilities and lines
of reporting authority remain substantially the same. The language of
this section, concerning creation of new excluded positions, is designed
to apply to positions whose responsibilities and lines of reporting
authority are changing substantially from any predecessor positions.
SECTION 4
The jurisdiction of the Guild is the work presently performed by
bargaining-unit employees covered by this Agreement and will be assigned
to bargaining-unit employees.
Non-bargaining-unit employees may continue to perform the work they
have performed in the past or are presently performing. In cases of
emergency, non-bargaining-unit employees may perform bargaining-unit
work.
The Employer’s purchase and use of editorial work or products may
continue.
In interpreting the language of this section, the Guild and the
Employer agree as follows:
A. With regard to writing by excluded
employees, the parties agree that the sentence, “Non-bargaining-unit
employees may continue to perform the work they have performed in the
past or are presently performing,” refers to the following types of
writing:
1) Articles in which excluded editors
write specifically from their unique perspective as editors, such as
articles in which they explain editorial decisions, describe the product
or discuss journalism issues.
2) Editorials by excluded members of
the editorial page staff.
3) All writing by journalists employed
in the Washington Bureau.
4) Opinion columns by the four top
editors listed in Section 3 of this Article 1 (currently Editor,
Managing Editor, Deputy Managing Editor/Local News and Editorial Page
Editor); sports columns by the Asst. Managing Editor/Sports; and
business columns by the Asst. Managing Editor/Business, provided that
all such columns appear less than three times weekly. In addition, one
other excluded member of the sports staff may write a column for a
Journal Sentinel Inc. publication that does not regularly appear as part
of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
5) Articles based on international or
out-of-state travel, provided such travel stems from opportunities
uniquely available to excluded editors and not from assignments that
could be given to bargaining-unit employees.
6) Articles based on the unique
personal life experiences of excluded employees, provided such articles
do not stem from assignments that could be given to bargaining-unit
employees.
B. In addition to the provisions
of this section, the Employer may designate excluded employees to
occasionally perform specified bargaining-unit work, under the following
conditions:
1. The specified work will be
limited to no more than ten (10) assignments in any quarter of any year,
of which no more than three (3) may be photographic in nature. No
excluded employee will perform more than three (3) such assignments in
any quarter. For purposes of this paragraph, an assignment will consist
of a single article, a package of related articles or equivalent work in
other areas.
2. The names of these employees,
and the nature of the work they are to perform, will be provided to the
Guild exclusions coordinator or designee as soon as possible after the
work has been assigned and, whenever practicable, before the work is
published.
C. 1. The parties agree
that the sentence, “Non-bargaining-unit employees may continue to
perform the work they have performed in the past or are presently
performing,” in this section, includes informational graphics by the
Graphics Editor, provided that managing, supervising and editing remain
that editor’s primary functions.
2. The parties agree that the
sentence, “Non-bargaining-unit employees may continue to perform the
work they have performed in the past or are presently performing,”
allows excluded online service editors to perform some production
duties, just as it allows excluded print editors to perform some editing
duties, provided that managing and supervising remain their primary
functions. It is further agreed that excluded editors may create brief
online items as links to other material online, or that otherwise do not
require reporting that ordinarily would be done by bargaining-unit
members, except as otherwise provided by this section.
D. It is not the intention of the
Employer to use excluded employees to deprive bargaining-unit members of
choice assignments.
Accordingly, the Employer agrees
to consider the experience, abilities and career goals of
bargaining-unit picture editors in applying the provisions of
Sub-section B of this Section 4 to photographic assignments. The
exclusions coordinators for the Employer and the Guild, or their
designees, will meet no later than Aug. 1 of each year to discuss the
Employer’s plans for applying these provisions to the upcoming
professional football season, and the impact of those plans on
bargaining-unit picture editors.
E. The Guild recognizes that
freelance writers and photographers may be used by the Journal Sentinel
to fulfill its obligations to report news, and that the Employer may
publish so-called advertorial sections, as defined by the arbitration
award of July 14, 1989. It is not the intention of the Employer to use
excluded employees, freelance journalists, advertorial sections,
interns, temporary employees or any combination thereof to replace
bargaining-unit jobs.
When requested, the Employer will provide the Guild with
information about its annual freelance budget, and will work with the
Guild to produce an annual inventory of individual freelancers’
production.
ARTICLE 2 – UNION MEMBERSHIP
SECTION 1
No employee will be required to become or remain a member of, or
refrain from membership in a union or to pay union dues, fees or any
other charges as a condition of employment or continuation of
employment.
SECTION 2
Upon an employee’s voluntary written assignment, the Employer will
deduct each month from the earnings of such employee and pay to the
Guild not later than the 15th day of the following month uniformly
levied membership dues. Such membership dues will be deducted from the
employee's earnings in accordance with the Guild's schedule of dues
rates, which will be furnished the Employer prior to the month in which
the dues rates are effective. Such schedule may be amended by the Guild
at any time. The voluntary written assignment may be revoked by the
employee at any time, to be effective the month following receipt of
written notification by the Employer.
ARTICLE 3 – HIRING, RETENTION AND CAREER
DEVELOPMENT
SECTION 1
The Employer is committed to providing equal employment opportunities
in all terms and conditions of employment without regard to race,
color, sex, religion, national origin, disability, marital or parental
status, sexual or affectional preference, age, irrelevant mental or
physical handicap or any other protected classes in state, federal or
local statutes.
This policy includes all terms and conditions of employment, such as
hiring, promotion, demotion, transfer, compensation, selection for
training, discipline, layoff, termination and recruitment.
SECTION 2
The Employer and the Guild share a mutual interest in maintaining a
qualified work force that reflects the diversity of the community we
serve. To that end, the Employer will:
1) Report annually to the Guild on
its performance in hiring and retaining women and minorities.
2) Assign each new employee, except
full-time journalists with more than five (5) years of prior experience,
a mentor to work with him or her during the employee’s first year on
the staff. A mentor also will be available to any other new or current
employee upon the employee’s request. The goal will be for each employee
to be able to turn not only to his or her manager for support, but also
to a peer (the mentor) and to a senior editor.
3) Restate its commitment to helping
employee development by using the performance review process to
regularly assess an employee's career path and by suggesting appropriate
training.
In turn, the Guild will support the Employer’s efforts in these areas
and will track and publicize the Employer's efforts in the areas of
hiring, retention and career development of women and minorities.
ARTICLE 4 – INFORMATION
SECTION 1
The Employer will supply to the Guild a list containing the following
information for each employee covered by this Agreement:
1) Name, address, sex, ethnicity and
date of birth.
2) Starting date.
3) Job title or classification.
4) Salary.
SECTION 2
The Employer will provide an updated list to the designated Guild
representative monthly. Such list will include all known hires,
terminations or changes in the above data, recorded during the previous
month.
SECTION 3
The Employer will annually notify the Guild of all employees eligible
for experience step increases and the date those increases are to take
effect. The Employer will supply to the Guild, on request, the
experience credit for each new employee hired below the top step of any
classification with experience-based steps.
SECTION 4
It is understood that the confidential information provided in
accordance with Section 1 is for collective bargaining purposes only.
ARTICLE 5 – GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE
SECTION 1
A grievance will mean a claim that this Agreement has been violated. The
grievance will be filed in writing with the appropriate department head
by a member of the bargaining unit or the Guild within twenty-five (25)
working days of knowledge of the alleged violation or from the time the
grievant should reasonably have had knowledge of the alleged violation.
The employee or the designated Guild representative will meet within
ten (10) working days of receipt of notice of the grievance with the
appropriate department head or designated representative to resolve the
grievance. The response of the department head will be made in writing
within five (5) working days of the meeting to the grieving party.
If the response is not satisfactory to the Guild, the grievance may
be appealed to the Employer’s representative in charge of labor
relations within five (5) working days of receipt of the department
head’s response. A meeting between the parties to resolve the grievance
will be held within ten (10) working days of receipt of notice of
appeal. The response of the Employer will be made in writing to the
Guild within five (5) working days of the meeting described in this
paragraph.
If the response is not satisfactory, the Guild may promptly submit
the grievance to final and binding arbitration.
Upon receipt of written notice moving a grievance to arbitration, the
parties will endeavor to select an arbitrator by mutual agreement. If
the parties are unable to agree upon an arbitrator, one will be selected
from a panel of arbitrators supplied by the Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Service. The selection of the single arbitrator from the
panel will be by the process of the Employer and Guild each striking one
name alternately. Either side may once during the arbitration procedure
exercise the option of dismissing an entire arbitration panel and
requesting a new listing. The fees and expenses for any arbitration will
be shared equally by the parties, except that each party will bear the
cost of its own witnesses, exhibits and counsel. A transcript will be
made if requested by either party. However, if one party does not
request a transcript, the cost of the transcript will be borne entirely
by the requesting party.
The time limits in this Article may be waived by mutual consent of
the parties.
The renewal of this Agreement will not be an arbitrable matter.
SECTION 2
Upon mutual consent, the parties may choose to resolve grievances or
potential grievances by informal discussions or other means. The use of
such processes will not limit the rights of either party under Section 1
of this Article 5.
ARTICLE 6 – GUILD–MANAGEMENT MEETINGS
The Guild and the Employer are committed to establishing and
maintaining a harmonious relationship. Toward that end, the parties
agree to meet and discuss matters of mutual concern involving the
relationship between the employees and the Employer. At the request of
either party, representatives of the Guild and the Employer will meet at
a mutually convenient time to discuss such matters, provided they do
not involve alleged violations of this Agreement, in which case the
provisions of Article 5 will control.
ARTICLE 7 – SECURITY
SECTION 1
A. There will be no dismissal except for
just and sufficient cause. The Guild and the employee will be notified
of each dismissal with specifications of the facts alleged to constitute
just and sufficient cause.
An employee and the Guild will be given a
copy of any written disciplinary action at the time such discipline is
entered into personnel, departmental or supervisory files.
B. In instances where the Employer
believes an employee needs the intervention of the Employee Assistance
Program, other than those cases arising from suspected drug or alcohol
abuse, the Employer will consider asking the employee to seek help
voluntarily, but reserves the right to make mandatory referrals if
circumstances warrant. The Guild reserves the right to grieve mandatory
referrals in which discipline could be imposed for non-compliance. If
drug or alcohol abuse is suspected, the provisions of Article 27 will
apply.
C. The Guild will be informed in a timely
manner when the Employer intends to impose a Return to Work Order or
“Last Chance” Agreement as an alternative to discharge. The Guild will
be given an opportunity to negotiate terms of the agreement. If those
negotiations fail to produce an agreement, the Employer may choose to
impose terms unilaterally. The Guild reserves the right to grieve such
action.
No bargaining-unit employee will be
required to sign a Return to Work Order or “Last Chance” Agreement
unless the provisions of the preceding paragraph have been followed.
Refusal to sign an agreement that complies with the above provisions may
result in discipline.
SECTION 2
For full-time employees, the probationary period will be one hundred
thirty (130) days worked for journalists and sixty (60) days worked for
all others. For part-time employees, the probationary period will be
calculated by multiplying the average number of hours worked weekly by
twenty-six (26) for journalists and by twelve (12) for all others.
An employee may be dismissed during this period for any reason and,
unless that reason is alleged to be in violation of the
non-discrimination section of this Agreement (Section 4 of this Article
7), the dismissal will not be subject to Article 5. The Guild need not
be notified of the reason for the dismissal of a probationary employee.
The length of a probationary period may be extended by mutual agreement
between the Employer and the Guild.
The Employer will conduct at least one (1) performance review with
each probationary employee during the probationary period. Such
performance review should normally be held no later than completion of
two-thirds (2/3) of the probationary period.
A temporary employee who moves without more than a thirty (30) day
break in service into a full- or part-time position requiring
substantially the same skills will have the temporary employment applied
toward the probationary period. In such cases, the starting date as a
temporary employee will be used in determining applicable benefit
eligibility.
SECTION 3
A dismissal or layoff effected by a reduction in force for legitimate
and reasonable purposes of economy will be deemed to be for just and
sufficient cause, provided that such dismissal or layoff is carried out
in accordance with the following provisions:
A. The Employer will decide when and how
many employees will be dismissed or laid off. When deciding on
dismissals or layoffs the Employer will give consideration to the needs
and requirements of the work to be done and experience, length of
service, proficiency, affirmative action goals, specialized skills and
other factors. If all the other factors are equal, length of service
will be the determining factor.
B. At least two weeks prior to the notice
of a dismissal, the Employer will offer employees the opportunity to
take a voluntary buyout. At the time the Employer makes the voluntary
offer, it will inform the Guild of how many employees it plans to
dismiss. The Employer has no obligation to accept the application of any
employee to take a voluntary buyout. However, for each voluntary buyout
application that the Employer does accept, the number of employees in
the planned dismissal will be reduced by one. Any employee who is
voluntarily bought out pursuant to this subsection will receive no less
than the severance pay set forth in Sub-section F of this Section 3.
C. The Employer will give to the Guild and
to the affected employees at least sixty (60) days’ written notice of
dismissals. In lieu of such notice, the Employer will pay each dismissed
employee one (1) day’s pay for each day the notice falls short of sixty
(60) days. The Employer will give to the Guild and to affected
employees at least thirty (30) days’ written notice of layoffs. In lieu
of such notice, the Employer will pay each laid-off employee one (1)
day’s pay for each day the notice falls short of thirty (30) days.
The notices will set forth the reasons for
the reduction in force, and the notice to the Guild will also contain
the names of the employees scheduled to be dismissed or laid off.
Compensation in lieu of notice will be distinct from and in addition to
any severance pay due.
D. Any layoff, as an alternative to
dismissal, will be limited to a period of six (6) months. The procedure
described in Sub-sections A and B above will apply. The Employer will
continue to pay its share of medical insurance premiums for eligible
employees on layoff. Time spent on layoff will not constitute a break in
continuity of service, but need not be counted as service time in
computing seniority.
E. Payroll savings resulting from
resignations and retirements will be taken into consideration in the
determination of the number of employees dismissed in any reduction in
force.
F. Employees dismissed through a reduction
in force will be given severance pay equal to one (1) week’s pay for
each completed six (6) months of continuous employment. Part-time
employees will be eligible for severance pay under the same conditions
as full-time employees, with the exception that the pay will be based on
equivalent full-time service.
G. The Employer will actively help
employees dismissed through a reduction in force seek other employment.
SECTION 4
There will be no dismissal of or other discrimination against an
employee because of membership or activity in the Guild, nor because of
age, sex, race, creed, color, national origin, marital or parental
status, sexual orientation, irrelevant mental or physical handicaps or
any other areas protected by law.
The Employer will strive to maintain a working environment free from all
forms of harassment or intimidation. The Employer will not condone or
tolerate any action or activity that is, or is perceived as being,
harassment or intimidation.
The Employer will maintain a No Harassment Policy and will provide
training to employees. All bargaining-unit employees will take part in
the training and will sign an acknowledgement of receiving the policy
and/or the training. If the No Harassment Policy is in conflict with
this Agreement, the Agreement will take precedence. Any discipline
resulting from alleged violations of the No Harassment Policy will be in
accordance with Section 1 of this Article 7.
With respect to the references to discrimination by age in this
section and Article 3, it is the intention of both parties that the
standard for enforcement will be the federal Age Discrimination in
Employment Act.
It is further understood by both parties that the prohibition of
discrimination on the basis of marital or parental status will not bar
the Employer from refusing to hire or place an employee in a position
that has a direct working relationship with a relative.
SECTION 5
Any employee transferred to a different assignment or different job will
receive sufficient training and orientation to perform his or her
duties properly.
If an employee is transferred to a bargaining-unit position requiring
substantially different skills, and while within the trial period for
that position, is deemed by the Employer to be unqualified for the
position, based on the employee’s performance, the employee will be
returned to his or her prior position or to another position, with pay
no less than what the employee would be receiving if the transfer had
not occurred. If such a return occurs after the trial period, there will
be no reduction in pay.
The trial period referred to herein is defined as the same length of
time as the probationary period for the position established in Section
2, Paragraph 1, of this Article 7. This language does not require
employees transferred from excluded positions to be returned to an
excluded position.
If an employee is transferred from an excluded position as defined in
Article 1, Section 3, to a bargaining-unit position, the provisions of
the 2nd paragraph of Article 7, Section 2, are not applicable.
SECTION 6
The Guild and the Employer share a common interest in ensuring that
employees are capable of meeting the challenges posed by new technology
in an evolving industry. To that end, the Guild will be given reasonable
notice of the introduction of new or modified equipment, computer
programs or processes that alter substantially the way employees perform
their jobs or that add to employees’ job responsibilities. The parties
will promptly discuss procedures for introducing such changes, including
the need for employee training, as well as any employee concerns, ideas
and suggestions concerning the changes.
Any resulting training will be conducted on the Employer’s time and
at the Employer’s expense, including transportation. The Employer will
inform the employees of its expectations for which training is needed
for their jobs, will make necessary training available to all affected
employees and will ensure that all employees receive sufficient training
to perform their duties properly. It is understood that for some
equipment and processes, not all employees will need the same training,
nor will all employees need to be trained in the same time or in the
same manner. Employees may volunteer for additional training beyond the
requirements of their jobs, subject to the Employer’s approval.
In general, it is the Employer’s intention that employees who take on
duties requiring entirely different skills, such as reporters shooting
video or still photography or copy editors recording audio, should do so
on a voluntary basis in keeping with past practice, but the Employer
reserves the right to assign such duties as required. An employee’s
performance will be judged primarily on the basis of his or her core
skills, such as judging a reporter on his or her writing and reporting
ability, but employees are expected to take part in any required
training and to make a good-faith effort to perform any new duties, as
assigned.
SECTION 7
In the event of a sale or merger of the Journal Sentinel, Journal
Sentinel Inc. or Journal Communications Inc., the Employer will follow
all appropriate federal, state and local laws with regard to purchases
and acquisitions. In addition, the Employer will consider the effect of
such a transaction on the bargaining unit and, upon request from the
Guild, will consult with the Guild on the effects of such a transaction.
SECTION 8
Employees will be free to engage in activities or other employment
outside of working hours in conformance with the established policies
and procedures of the Employer.
Questions of interpretation of such established policies and
procedures will be resolved through the application of the following
standards: Employees may engage in those outside activities that do not
pose a conflict of interest, or a reasonable appearance of such a
conflict, so as to interfere with the proper and impartial performance
of their duties as employees; or do not compromise the credibility or
reputation of the Employer.
The Employer will maintain Ethics Policies, both Corporate and
Newsroom, and will provide training to employees. All bargaining-unit
employees will take part in the training and will sign acknowledgements
of receiving the policy and/or the training. If the Ethics Policies are
in conflict with this Agreement, the Agreement will take precedence. Any
discipline resulting from alleged violations of the Ethics Policies
will be in accordance with Section 1 of this Article 7.
ARTICLE 8 – SEVERANCE PAY
Upon discharge for reasons other than gross misconduct or reduction
in force, a non-probationary employee will receive severance pay in a
lump sum equal to one (1) week’s pay for each year of continuous
full-time employment, not to exceed a year's pay.
The Employer and the Guild agree that the willful failure of an
employee to follow a reasonable absenteeism/tardiness policy precludes
the right to severance.
Part-time employees will be eligible for severance pay under the same
conditions as full-time employees, with the exception that the lump sum
payment will be based on equivalent full-time service.
ARTICLE 9 – RETIREMENT AND INVESTMENT
SAVINGS
The Employer agrees to provide eligible employees the same Pension
Plan and Investment Savings Plan under the same terms and conditions as
those received by all other eligible non-represented employees of the
Employer. The Employer may add, change, and/or eliminate all or part of
any of the Plans listed above and the terms and conditions of those
Plans, applicable to eligible employees covered by this Article without
bargaining with the Guild, as long as any such additions, changes or
eliminations are equally applicable to all other eligible
non-represented employees of the Employer.
ARTICLE 10 – TRANSFERS AND PROMOTIONS
SECTION 1
A. Notice of all News Department and
online editorial vacancies and new positions, except temporary
positions, will be posted for at least five (5) working days (excluding
Saturdays, Sundays and holidays) on an Employer-maintained Intranet
computer site, and will be accessible to all employees in the
departments covered by this Agreement. A staffwide e-mail announcement
will accompany each posting. Positions will remain posted on the site as
long as they remain open. Only vacancies and not assignments are
covered by the posting requirement. The position will remain open for
the five (5) day posting period. The opening will not be advertised
outside the bargaining unit before the position has been posted in
accordance with this section.
The Employer may change the length of its
posting period, but in no case will the posting period be less than five
(5) working days.
B. The parties agree on the need to spell
out their joint intent on the posting of positions in order to eliminate
future disputes in this area. They further agree that continuing
attempts to improve lines of communication between the Guild and the
Employer can help prevent conflicts over interpretation of this section.
The following standards should be applied in interpreting these
provisions:
The language of this section, concerning
posting of vacancies and new positions, is designed to apply to
positions whose responsibilities and lines of reporting authority are
changing substantially.
A “vacancy” means either a new or vacant
position within the departments covered by this Agreement. This includes
all positions referenced in this Agreement. Posting is therefore
required for any position that is:
1) Excluded under the provisions of
Article 1, Section 3, or proposed for exclusion under that section,
except internships and positions exempt from posting under the
provisions of Section 1C of this Article 10.
2) Designated for special treatment in
overtime or transfers under the provisions of Section 2 of this Article
10, or Article 11, Section 3, including the Outdoor Editor, but
excluding the assignments described in Article 11, Section 3A (4).
3) Listed in any way in Article 17,
except when the provisions of Article 17 require an employee to be
advanced from one step of a pay classification to another on the basis
of experience or seniority; when a journalist is advanced to the Senior
Journalist classification “on the basis of consistent performance at a
high level in one or more assignments; or demonstrated performance in
positions of increasing responsibility; or substantial experience”; or
when an editorial assistant is advanced to the Senior Editorial
Assistant classification “based on advanced duties.”
An “assignment" means either an individual
short-term assignment (such as an article, series of articles,
photograph or headline) or a long-term assignment (such as a reporter’s
beat or analogous assignments for other employees).
C. The following excluded positions need
not be posted in accordance with this section:
Editor, Managing Editor, Deputy Managing
Editor/Local News, Editorial Page Editor and online Editor.
If an initial vacancy occurs in any of the
excluded positions listed in this Sub-section C and it is filled from
within the affected department, the Employer need not post up to two (2)
additional vacancies resulting from simultaneous, related, sequential
promotions or transfers. All additional sequential vacancies must be
posted, even if the vacancy is one of the positions listed above. There
will be no exceptions to the posting requirements if a sequential
vacancy is a bargaining-unit position.
D. The Employer will provide a personal,
timely notice to an employee whose application for a position is denied.
All full-time, part-time and temporary
employees who apply for posted vacancies will receive fair
consideration. Employees who apply for posted vacancies will be given no
less consideration than outside candidates. No later than Jan. 31 of
each year, the Employer will provide the Guild with an annual report
listing the vacant positions filled by internal candidates and those
filled by external candidates during the preceding year. The Employer
will not indicate a preference for any candidate for a bargaining-unit
position before interviewing all internal applicants.
E. The Employer and the Guild will each
designate a posting coordinator to administer the provisions of this
section. Before the Employer reorganizes all or part of the staff,
creates a new position or restructures an existing position, and wishes
to do so without posting all affected positions, or whenever other
questions arise about whether positions should be posted, the Employer's
posting coordinator or designee will meet with the Guild's posting
coordinator or designee to determine how the provisions of this section
should be applied. The parties will make a good-faith effort to reach
agreement before the changes are announced to the staff.
During the course of such discussions, the
Guild may waive posting of certain positions on a case-by-case basis,
provided that such waivers set no precedent and do not detract from this
section's primary goal of ensuring that bargaining-unit employees have
the opportunity to apply and receive fair consideration for positions
they desire. No such waivers will be granted retroactively.
The provisions of this Sub-section E will
not apply to excluded positions that the Employer proposes to add to the
list of positions exempt from posting in Sub-section C. It is
understood that the positions listed in Sub-section C are the four
highest-ranking positions in the newsroom and the highest-ranking
position in the online service. No positions may be added to the list in
Sub-section C without simultaneously deleting the same number of
positions from the current list.
F. No position will be considered to be
filled until all applicable provisions of this section have been
fulfilled. However, no bargaining-unit employee will be dismissed
because he or she was placed in a position not posted in accordance with
this section.
SECTION 2
The transfer of employees to any bureau outside the five-county
Milwaukee metropolitan area will be by mutual agreement. The Employer
will pay reasonable and legitimate expenses to move household goods when
employees are transferred to or from these bureaus.
SECTION 3
Employees transferred from Milwaukee to a news bureau in the five-county
area, from such a bureau to Milwaukee, or from one such bureau to
another such bureau, will be paid mileage to and from the new work site
pursuant to Article 21, Section 2. Such mileage will be paid only for
the miles actually driven that are in excess of the miles the employee
would have driven, had the employee remained at the previous work site.
It is further understood that the mileage is based on the place of
residence at the time of transfer. If the employee subsequently changes
residence to a location closer to the new work site, the mileage
reimbursement will be adjusted accordingly.
SECTION 4
A. Bargaining-unit employees on temporary
assignment outside the Guild’s jurisdiction will continue to be members
of the bargaining unit.
B. It is not the Employer’s intention to
assign employees to substitute for bargaining-unit editors and assistant
editors against the employees’ wishes if reasonable alternatives are
available. If an employee requests not to be assigned to substitute for a
bargaining-unit editor or assistant editor, the Employer will make
every reasonable effort to honor the employee’s wishes. Employees will
be free to submit such requests with no negative consequences.
SECTION 5
This section establishes procedures to be followed should the Employer
wish to transfer an employee against the employee’s wishes. It does not
impose new limits on the Employer’s right to order such transfers.
If the Employer wishes to transfer an employee against the employee's
wishes, for a period of two (2) months or longer, the Employer will
notify the employee in writing, at least ten (10) working days in
advance of such transfer, of its intent, its reasons for the proposed
transfer, and the employee's rights under this section.
If the employee requests, the Employer will provide him or her with a
list of open positions for which applications are being accepted, and
will consider the employee's application for such positions. If the
employee requests, the Employer will meet with the employee to consider
other options the employee may suggest. The employee will have an
opportunity to meet with the Managing Editor or Editor regarding the
proposed transfer.
Before any such transfer takes place, the Employer will consider, in
addition to other factors, the interests and desires of the employee as
expressed in such meetings.
If the Employer does transfer an employee against the employee’s
wishes, the employee will have a chance to provide input into the
wording of any announcement about the new assignment.
Transfers against an employee’s wishes will not be used as a form of
discipline.
If a transfer is at least partially the result of performance
problems, it is expected that such problems will have been brought to
the employee’s attention previously through his or her performance
review(s) and/or other communication(s) between the employee and his or
her supervisors.
For purposes of this section, a transfer is defined as a substantial
change in an employee’s work duties, normally involving a change in
section, department or shift. Examples include: a transfer of a reporter
to or from a bureau or the Milwaukee office; a transfer from reporter
to copy editor or photographer to picture editor; or a transfer from a
non-suburban to a suburban reporting beat; or a transfer from a day
shift to a night or early-morning shift.
Also for purposes of this section, a transfer against an employee’s
wishes is defined as a transfer that the employee did not request and to
which the employee objects within a reasonable period of time after
being notified of the transfer.
ARTICLE 11 – HOURS AND OVERTIME
SECTION 1
The standard workweek will be forty (40) hours and the standard workday
will be eight (8) hours, exclusive of lunch periods. The standard
workday may be modified, by mutual agreement with the employee, to ten
(10) hours per day within an eleven (11) hour period. The ten (10) hour
workday may be canceled with four (4) weeks’ notice by either party.
SECTION 2
A. Overtime will be paid at the rate of
time-and-one-half (1.5X) the regular rate of pay for work performed in
excess of the standard workday or standard workweek.
B. Compensating time off may be taken in
lieu of pay, at the rate of time-and-one-half (1.5X), by mutual
agreement. Such time off will be scheduled when, by mutual agreement, it
can reasonably be taken without unduly interfering with the operations
of the Employer.
SECTION 3
A. Unless they are currently eligible
for cash overtime, the following employees are exempt from the cash
overtime provisions of this Agreement. They will be treated individually
as has been done in the past with respect to compensated time off.
However, they will either be paid cash overtime or be given compensated
time off, based on individual arrangements agreed to in advance.
1) Editorial writers and cartoonists
2) Employees primarily designated as
critics
3) Employees primarily designated as
columnists, as defined in Article 17, Section 1B
4) Reporters and photographers covering
professional sports teams; roving reporters and photographers; Outdoor
Editor and outdoor writers; others assigned to positions that do not
have a regular workday or workweek; employees traveling out of town on
pre-planned overnight assignments; and employees traveling on assignment
outside the United States.
B. Madison Bureau reporters covering
activities of the state government, exclusive of the University of
Wisconsin System and courts below the level of the Wisconsin Supreme
Court, will be eligible for cash overtime after forty-five (45) hours in
a week or ten (10) hours in a day. They will be eligible for
compensated time off for that portion of a workday between eight (8) and
ten (10) hours, or that portion of a workweek between forty (40) and
forty-five (45) hours.
SECTION 4
A. Weekly work schedules for employees
will be posted in accordance with past practice, but no later than 5
p.m. Monday for the following Monday through Sunday work week.
B. Employee requests for changes in work
schedules may be granted at the discretion of the Employer. Employer
changes in the work schedule will be made with as much advance notice as
possible.
C. In the event an employee’s starting
time is changed, and the employee is not notified of such change before
the end of the employee's previous scheduled shift, a ten dollar ($10)
callback will be paid.
D. An interim of not less than ten (10)
hours will elapse between regularly scheduled shifts, exclusive of
overtime. When a scheduled day off intervenes, an interim of not less
than thirty-four (34) hours will elapse between regularly scheduled
shifts, exclusive of overtime. Any hours worked within these periods
will be paid at the overtime rate. These requirements will not apply to
out-of-town, overnight assignments or to scheduling done at an
employee’s request.
E. An employee required to work on a
scheduled day off will be paid a minimum of four (4) hours pay at the
overtime rate, unless the employee reaches an agreement to work less
than four (4) hours.
ARTICLE 12 – HOLIDAYS
SECTION 1
Full-time employees will have the following holidays with full pay: New
Year's Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day
and Christmas Day.
SECTION 2
The standard workweek for a full-time employee during a holiday week
will be to work four (4) shifts and to have the holiday off. For those
full-time employees whose standard workweek is four (4) days, the
standard workweek during a holiday week will be to work three (3) shifts
and to have the holiday off.
SECTION 3
Any employee who works on a holiday will receive, in addition to holiday
pay, compensation at the rate of time-and-one-half (1.5X), plus the
differential described in Article 18, Section 5F.
SECTION 4
A full-time employee who has a holiday off, but works a fifth (5th)
shift in a holiday week, will receive compensation at the rate of
time-and-one-half (1.5X) for time worked on the fifth (5th) shift. A
full-time employee whose standard workweek is four (4) days, has the
holiday off but works a fourth (4th) shift in a holiday week, will
receive compensation at the rate of time-and-one-half (1.5X) for time
worked on the fourth (4th) day.
SECTION 5
Employees who are exempt from the paid overtime provision of Article 11
also are exempt from paid overtime for working on a holiday, or a fifth
(5th) shift in a holiday week. They will be treated individually as they
have in the past with respect to paid time off.
SECTION 6
In lieu of pay, under Sections 3 and 4, eligible employees may take
compensating time off by mutual agreement. Such time also will be
scheduled by mutual agreement.
SECTION 7
In a holiday week, the Employer will make every effort to assure that no
part-time employee will be scheduled for fewer hours as a result of the
holiday.
ARTICLE 13 – VACATIONS
SECTION 1
A. Full-time employees hired before
January 1, 1995, will receive vacation in each calendar year according
to the following schedule:
In the year in which an employee reaches
nine (9) years of service, and each year thereafter, through the year in
which the employee reaches nineteen (19) years of service, twenty-one
(21) days will be scheduled.
In the year in which an employee reaches
twenty (20) years of service, and each year thereafter, twenty-six (26)
days will be scheduled.
B. Full-time employees hired on or after
January 1, 1995, will receive one (1) day of vacation in each calendar
year, in addition to earning vacation based upon the number of days paid
during the calendar year, according to the following schedule:
Employees with less than four (4) years of
service will earn vacation at the rate of one (1) day for each
twenty-six (26) days paid, or major fraction thereof, up to a maximum of
ten (10) days.
Employees with at least four (4) but less
than nine (9) years of service will earn vacation at the rate of one (1)
day for each seventeen (17) days paid, or major fraction thereof, up to
a maximum of fifteen (15) days.
Employees who have at least nine (9) years
of service -- but less than twenty (20) years of service for those
hired before January 1, 2006 -- will earn vacation at the rate of one
(1) day for each thirteen (13) days paid, or major fraction thereof, up
to a maximum of twenty (20) days.
Employees who are hired before January 1,
2006, and have twenty (20) or more years of service will earn vacation
at the rate of one (1) day for each ten (10) days paid or major fraction
thereof, up to a maximum of twenty-five (25) days.
During the calendar year in which
employees reach their fourth (4th), ninth (9th) or twentieth (20th) week
of service, they will earn vacation at the higher rate for the entirety
of that calendar year.
With managerial approval, employees will
be allowed to use vacation time that has not yet been earned.
SECTION 2
Vacation time for which an employee has not submitted a request by Oct. 1
is subject to scheduling by management. Employees will not be required
to take vacation one (1) day at a time if they have requested all of
their vacation time before Oct. 1.
SECTION 3
Vacation time, with the exception of the fifth week, must be taken in
the calendar year for which it is earned and may not be carried over
into a subsequent year, unless approved by the Employer.
SECTION 4
At the employee’s option, the fifth week of vacation may be deferred.
The scheduling of such deferred vacation is subject to the concurrence
of the department head. In such case, however, the entire fifth week
must be taken or deferred; an employee may not defer only a portion of
the week. Vacation weeks so accumulated will be paid for at the
employee’s rate of pay in effect at the time the accumulated vacation
weeks are taken.
Upon termination of employment, all weeks accumulated and deferred
prior to January 1, 2006, will be paid for at the employee’s rate of pay
as of December 31, 2005, or the date of termination, whichever comes
first. All weeks accumulated and deferred during and after 2006 will be
paid for at the employee’s rate of pay as of December 31 in the year in
which the vacation was earned.
SECTION 5
Upon termination of employment, an employee (or the employee’s
beneficiary or estate if there is no beneficiary) will receive all
accrued vacation pay, in accordance with the applicable provisions of
this Article 13.
Under no circumstances will any employee be required to reimburse the
Employer for taking more vacation than was earned at the time of
termination.
SECTION 6
A. For full-time employees hired before
January 1, 1995:
All full-time employees will accrue one
(1) day of vacation in each calendar year, in addition to the following
schedule:
For employees who have at least six (6)
months but less than four (4) years of service upon termination,
vacation will accrue at the rate of one (1) day for every twenty-six
(26) days of service, or major fraction thereof up to a maximum of ten
(10) days. For employees who have longer periods of service, vacation
will accrue at the following rates:
At least four (4) years but less than nine
(9) years of service -- One (1) day for each seventeen (17) days
worked or major fraction thereof, up to a maximum of fifteen (15) days.
At least nine (9) years but less than
twenty (20) years of service -- One (1) day for each thirteen (13) days
worked or major fraction thereof, up to a maximum of twenty (20) days.
Twenty (20) or more years of service --
One (1) day for each ten (10) days worked or major fraction thereof, up
to a maximum of twenty-five (25) days.
B. For full-time employees hired on or
after January 1, 1995, vacation wlll accrue on the schedule described in
Subsection B of Section 1 of this Article13.
SECTION 7
Part-time employees who move into full-time positions after July 26,
1986, will have their part-time continuous service counted, on a
pro-rated basis, to determine their vacation entitlement the following
year and thereafter. The Employer will calculate an effective full-time
starting date for vacation purposes, and inform the employee and the
Guild of that date. If the employee was hired on or after January 1,
1995, this calculation will apply to vacation entitlement for the
current year and thereafter.
SECTION 8
For part-time employees:
Regular part-time employees with less than four (4) years of service
will be eligible for paid vacation, on the basis of one (1) hour of
vacation pay for every twenty-five (25) hours worked in the preceding
calendar year, not to exceed eighty (80) paid vacation hours. It is
understood that part-time employees will not be eligible for any accrued
vacation pay, until after six (6) months of employment.
After the completion of four (4) years of service, part-time
employees’ vacation will be calculated on the basis of one (1) hour of
vacation pay for every sixteen and one-third (16-1/3) hours worked in
the preceding calendar year, not to exceed one hundred twenty (120) paid
vacation hours.
After the completion of nine (9) years of service, part-time
employees’ vacation will be calculated on the basis of one (1) hour of
vacation pay for every twelve (12) hours worked in the preceding
calendar year, not to exceed one hundred sixty (160) paid vacation
hours.
After the completion of twenty (20) years of service, vacation for
part-time employees hired before January 1, 2006, will be calculated on
the basis of one (1) hour of vacation pay for every nine and four-tenths
(9.4) hours worked in the preceding calendar year, not to exceed two
hundred (200) paid vacation hours.
SECTION 9
No time will be deducted from the vacation accrual as a result of time
lost due to injury, compensable under the workers compensation law; jury
service; time spent in National Guard or Reserve training assignments
that do not exceed thirty (30) days in any vacation accrual year; or for
any other reason, except in case of termination or death.
SECTION 10
The Employer has established a Transitional Vacation Account (TVA) for
each employee who was hired on or after January 1, 1995, but before
January 1, 2006, and who remained on the payroll as of January 1, 2006,
when the new vacation schedule took effect, as described in this Article
13.
Each account initially contained the same amount of vacation as the
affected employee would have been entitled to take during 2006.
In addition to the vacation provided in this Article 13, the affected
employees will be allowed to take up to one (1) week of vacation from
their TVAs during each calendar year, from 2006 through 2011, with the
approval of their department head.
With the exception of the fourth week, all affected employees must
use all vacation in their TVAs by December 31, 2011. The Employer is
committed to assisting these employees in scheduling this vacation time
during that period. Employees who have four (4) weeks in their TVAs will
be compensated in cash for the fourth week, or any remaining part
thereof, if it cannot be scheduled before December 31, 2011.
No later than January 1 of each year, starting in 2006, the Employer
will provide each affected employee with an accounting of the time
remaining in his or her TVA, the time used and the amount that can be
used in the upcoming year, through 2011 or until the employee’s TVA is
exhausted, whichever comes first.
Upon termination of employment, an employee (or the employee’s
beneficiary or estate if there is no beneficiary) will receive pay for
all vacation in the employee’s TVA.
ARTICLE 14 - SICK LEAVE AND INSURANCE
The Employer agrees to provide eligible employees the same Group
Health and Welfare Plans, paid sick leave and short-term disability
plans under the same terms and conditions (including the premium
contributions to be paid by the employee) as those received by all other
eligible non-represented employees of the Employer. However, no
bargaining-unit employee will be required to pay more than 35% of the
health care premium for any particular plan. The Employer may add,
change and/or eliminate any of the benefits listed above and the terms
and conditions of those benefits, applicable to eligible employees
covered by this Article without bargaining with the Guild, as long as
any such additions, changes or eliminations are equally applicable to
all other eligible non-represented employees of the Employer.
ARTICLE 15 – LEAVES OF ABSENCE
SECTION 1
Employees will be granted paid and/or unpaid leaves of absence for
various academic, family, personal, disability and other reasons, in
accordance with past Employer practice and in accordance with applicable
federal and state statutes. One example of a past practice has been
that employees’ requests for academic leave have been granted at the
Employer’s discretion.
SECTION 2
Unpaid leaves of absence of up to five (5) working days will be granted
so that up to three (3) Guild members, or more by mutual agreement, may
serve as delegates to Guild conventions or other meetings. The elected
delegates to the international convention will be made known to the
Employer by March 1 of each year. Such leaves will be for not more than
ten (10) working days in a calendar year for each individual, and not
more than twenty (20) working days in a calendar year for all Guild
members together, unless otherwise negotiated. In the event the absence
of employees selected as delegates creates an undue hardship on the
Employer, the Guild and the Employer will meet to resolve the matter.
SECTION 3
For any employee taking an unpaid leave of absence in excess of thirty
(30) consecutive days, vacation entitlement may be proportionately
reduced in the current calendar year for full-time employees hired on or
after Jan. 1, 1995, and in the following calendar year for all other
employees.
SECTION 4
An employee who enters the United States armed forces, or who is called
into active or emergency services because of reservist status or as a
member of the National Guard, or who is required to participate in
military training, will be granted an unpaid leave of absence for the
duration of such service. On completion of such service, the employee
will be entitled to reinstatement by the Employer. Time spent in
military service will count as time of service to the Employer. Any paid
vacation time not taken as a result of military service will be paid in
cash to the employee.
SECTION 5
In the event of a death in the family:
A. Full-time employees will be granted up
to five (5) days off with pay and part-time employees up to one (1)
normally scheduled work week off with pay to attend the funeral or
memorial service of a parent, stepparent, spouse, same-sex domestic
partner, child or stepchild.
B. Full-time employees will be granted up
to three (3) days off with pay and part-time employees up to two (2)
days off with pay to attend the funeral or memorial service of a
brother, sister, mother-in-law, father-in-law, brother-in-law,
sister-in-law, grandparent, grandchild, uncle or aunt.
C. The Employer will give appropriate
consideration to requests for additional funeral leave.
SECTION 6
New parents, including birth and adoptive parents, may be granted leave
of up to six (6) months upon request. Paid disability leave for birth
mothers will be administered in accordance with Article 14, Section 1,
except that it will be extended to all employees on the same terms,
regardless of length of service. The Employer will continue to pay its
share of medical insurance for employees on such leave.
SECTION 7
Employees will be able to use accrued paid time off, or unpaid time off
of up to two (2) weeks, for family medical emergencies. The Employer
will give appropriate consideration to requests for additional unpaid
leave and for leave for emergencies concerning the employee’s domicile.
SECTION 8
Employees required to report for jury duty will be granted a leave of
absence for the duration of such duty. Such leave will be with pay,
except that the Employer may deduct from the employee’s wages an amount
equal to the jury duty pay received.
ARTICLE 16 – PART-TIME AND TEMPORARY
EMPLOYEES AND INTERNS
SECTION 1
A. A part-time employee is one who is
hired to work regularly eighty percent (80%) or less of the full-time
workweek provided in this Agreement. Part-time employees will receive
the same orientation and in-house training as full-time employees in
similar positions, except as such orientation pertains to matters
specific to full-time or part-time status.
B. Full-time employees will not be made
part-time, except by mutual agreement with the individual concerned and
notification to the Guild.
SECTION 2
A temporary employee is one who is employed for a special project or for
a specified period of time, in either case not to exceed six (6)
months. In the event a temporary employee is hired because an employee
is granted a paid or unpaid leave of absence under this Agreement, the
period of temporary employment will not exceed the length of the leave,
or six (6) months, whichever is greater. At no time will the number of
temporary employees exceed three (3), not counting those hired because
an employee is on leave. Temporary employees may be excluded from the
following provisions of this Agreement: Articles 7, 8, 9, 12 (except
that temporary employees will be paid at the overtime rate for work
performed on a holiday, as defined therein), 13, 14, 15 and 20. A
regular part-time employee who works full-time under the same
restrictions as a temporary employee, as defined above, will continue to
have the benefits of a regular part-time employee.
If the Employer wishes to temporarily increase the number of
temporary employees or to extend the term of a specified temporary
position, the exclusions coordinators for the Employer and the Guild, or
their designees, will meet in advance to discuss the issue. The Guild
may waive those provisions of the above paragraph on a case-by-case
basis, provided such waivers set no precedent and do not detract from
the job security of bargaining-unit members.
Except as provided in this Article 16, no individual will spend more
than six (6) consecutive months in any combination of temporary,
probationary and internship status without becoming a regular employee.
SECTION 3
A. An internship is an educational
experience for a student, or immediately after college graduation,
lasting no more than thirteen (13) weeks, during which the intern
performs bargaining-unit work under the guidance of Journal Sentinel
Inc. employees. Wisconsin-based interns will be paid no less than the
applicable state or federal minimum wage and reimbursed for reasonable
and legitimate expenses incurred in the Employer's service, regardless
of whether they are compensated by the Employer or by another
organization. Wisconsin-based interns compensated by the Employer will
be paid at the rate of time-and-one-half (1.5X) for overtime work;
those compensated by another organization will be either discouraged
from working overtime or compensated in time off. Washington Bureau
interns may be compensated differently.
It is not the intention of the Employer to
increase the number of interns hired beyond the limits outlined below,
nor to change the definition of an intern, with the exception of the
Urban Affairs Residencies. If the Employer wishes to temporarily
increase the number of interns, to change the definition of a specified
intern position or to allow a visiting journalist to perform
bargaining-unit work as an educational experience, the exclusions
coordinators for the Employer and the Guild, or their designees, will
meet in advance to discuss the issue. The Guild may waive those
provisions of this section on a case-by-case basis, provided such
waivers set no precedent and do not detract from the job security of
bargaining-unit members. The Guild exclusion coordinator or designee
will be notified of each intern hired.
B. The Urban Affairs Residencies provide
one-year internships in urban affairs. These interns are paid at no less
than the intern level for three (3) months, at which point their status
is moved to the first step of the Journalist classification for the
remaining nine (9) months.
C. 1. The total number of interns will not
exceed twenty (20) in one year, of whom no more than three (3) may be
Urban Affairs Residents.
2. Each Urban Affairs Residency extends
the standard probationary period for the duration of the internship,
after which the employee would be eligible to be hired full-time. If the
intern is hired at the end of that period, the Employer will conduct a
salary review to determine whether an increase is appropriate, based on
his or her work at the paper, as well as prior work experience. His or
her hire date would be adjusted to the first day of the internship.
If an intern was employed as a regular or
temporary employee immediately before the internship, the internship
will not be considered a break in service.
3. The Employer will provide a copy of
this Section to each Urban Affairs Resident at the start of the
internship.
ARTICLE 17 – MINIMUM SALARY CLASSIFICATIONS
SECTION 1
A. Artists, copy editors, designers,
photographers, picture editors, producers, reporters and other employees
contributing to the editorial content of the newspaper, its online
service will be placed in one (1) of the following minimum salary
classifications, based on the length and nature of their work
experience:
Journalist
Employees at the first step of this
classification are in the earlier stages of their careers. They are in
the process of building their skills to perform normal and routine
duties in reporting, writing, photography, page design, graphics, online
production and/or editing. Employees in this classification will be
moved to the second step after three (3) years of experience at the
first step.
Employees at the second step of this
classification typically have three (3) or more years of experience and
are fully qualified practitioners. All journalists with at least three
(3) years of experience will be placed no lower than the second step.
Employees at the third step of this
classification are journalists who have been employed at the second step
at Journal Sentinel Inc. for four (4) years, or journalists who have
been employed for six (6) years at Journal Sentinel Inc.
Senior Journalist
Employees in this classification are fully
qualified journalists designated by the Employer on the basis of
consistent performance at a high level in one or more assignments; or
demonstrated performance in positions of increasing responsibility; or
substantial experience; and journalists transferred from an excluded
position.
Also included in this classification are
editorial writers and cartoonists; employees primarily designated as
columnists or critics; and all editors, assistant editors, coordinators
and team leaders covered by this Agreement.
The Employer will annually review all
Journalists at the third step of their classification to determine their
eligibility for advancement to Senior Journalist. In addition,
Journalists may submit a written request to their senior editor and
their immediate supervisor for Senior Journalist designation. Such
requests typically will be made no more than once a year, although
management will consider individual circumstances for such requests.
Senior newsroom management will meet personally and on a timely basis
with employees who request Senior Journalist status. Employees who are
designated Senior Journalists will be informed on a timely basis.
Employees who are not granted Senior Journalist status will be given
personal and timely notice of steps they may take to increase the
likelihood of achieving Senior Journalist status.
B. The parties agree to interpret the
phrase “employees primarily designated as columnists” as follows:
1. It is the intention of the parties to
grant Senior Journalist status to those journalists whose primary
function is to produce columns.
2. At the time of this understanding, the
majority of such individuals were full-time journalists assigned to
regularly produce three or more columns weekly. However, such
individuals could occasionally produce less than three columns a week,
or write some articles that were not columns, without jeopardizing their
Senior Journalist status.
3. This provision also will be applied to
full-time journalists regularly producing two columns weekly -- or even
one -- if that is their primary function, under the same terms as
described above.
4. However, it is not the intention of the
parties to grant automatic Senior Journalist status to full-time
journalists who produce one or two columns weekly, if their primary
function is not to be a columnist, but rather to be a reporter or copy
editor.
5. It is also not the intention of the
parties to grant automatic Senior Journalist status to part-time
employees who regularly produce one column a week, even if that is their
primary function.
6. The parties are not in agreement at
this time concerning the status of part-timers who produce two or more
columns a week. If the Employer designates a part-time employee to
regularly write two or more columns a week, the parties agree to
negotiate on the proper classification for the employee. If those
negotiations fail to produce an agreement, the Guild will have the right
to pursue the matter through the grievance process.
C. In regard to positions with the title
of “coordinator” or “team leader,” the parties agree the positions of
News Design Coordinator, Features Design Coordinator, Sports Design
Coordinator, Business Design Coordinator and Education Team Leader, as
currently constituted, are not “editors and assistant editors,” and are
eligible for the substitute pay described in Article 18. The Graphics
Coordinator will continue to be treated in the same fashion until the
position becomes vacant, at which time the position will be retitled
Assistant Graphics Editor and the incumbent’s successor will be treated
as an editor or assistant. The online Production Coordinator and online
Sports Coordinator will be treated as editors or assistant editors.
The Employer agrees to consult with the Guild in advance if the Employer
wishes to accomplish either of the following without classifying the
affected positions as Senior Journalists: (a) to create any new
positions in which bargaining-unit personnel take on any of the
responsibilities normally associated with editors, assistant editors,
coordinators or team leaders, including but not limited to assigning,
scheduling, supervising or coordinating, regardless of title, or (b) to
significantly expand the duties of any of the positions listed in the
preceding paragraph. The parties will make a good-faith effort to reach
agreement before the changes take effect and are announced to the staff.
It is not the Employer’s intention to change the wage classification of
any position that is currently classified as a Senior Journalist.
SECTION 2
Technical specialists are employees whose work encompasses pre-press
work on photography, photo lab services, news and graphics computer
systems operations and maintenance, as well as routine graphics and
pagination production work, with significant technical skills critical
to the production of the newspaper.
All technical specialists covered by this Agreement will be placed in
the following classification:
Technical Specialist
Employees at the first step of this classification are in the earlier
stages of their careers. Employees in this classification will be moved
to the second step after three (3) years of experience at the first
step.
Employees at the second step of this classification typically have three
(3) or more years of experience and are fully qualified practitioners.
All technical specialists with at least three (3) years of experience
will be placed at the second step.
SECTION 3
Based on job duties, all News Information Center employees covered by
this Agreement will be placed in one (1) of the following
classifications:
Archivist
Employees in this classification generally are involved in enhancing,
archiving or retrieving images or text. Employees at the first step of
this classification are in the earlier stages of their careers and in
the process of building their skills. Employees in this classification
will be moved to the second step after three (3) years of experience.
Employees at the second step of this classification typically have three
(3) or more years of experience. All archivists with at least three (3)
years of experience will be placed no lower than the second step of
this classification.
News Researcher
Employees in this classification generally are involved in research.
Employees at the first step of this classification are in the earlier
stages of their careers and in the process of building their skills to
perform in-depth research. Employees in this classification will be
moved to the second step after three (3) years of experience.
Employees at the second step of this classification typically have three
(3) or more years of experience. All researchers with at least three
(3) years of experience will be placed no lower than the second step of
this classification.
Senior Information Specialist
Employees in this classification are assistant managers.
SECTION 4
Editorial assistants are employees whose regularly assigned duties
consist primarily of clerical tasks but also include elementary
journalistic functions, including but not limited to writing shorts,
briefs and short obituaries; compiling columns of calendar events,
personnel changes, media listings or similar routine items; updating or
filing graphics; and importing, transferring and outputting material
using various computer systems.
Based on job duties, all editorial assistants covered by this
Agreement will be placed in one (1) of the following classifications:
Editorial Assistant
Employees who have less than two (2) years of experience as an
editorial assistant at the Journal Sentinel will be placed at the first
step of this classification. Employees who have at least two (2) years
of experience as an editorial assistant at the Journal Sentinel will be
moved to the second step.
Senior Editorial Assistant
Employees in this classification are editorial assistants designated
by the Employer based on advanced duties, particularly those who assist
their supervisors with administrative responsibilities.
The Employer will annually review the remaining editorial assistants and
their duties to determine further eligibility. In addition, editorial
assistants may submit a written request to their senior editor and their
immediate supervisor for Senior Editorial Assistant designation. Such
requests typically will be made no more than once a year, although
management will consider individual circumstances for such requests.
Senior newsroom management will meet personally and on a timely basis
with people who request Senior Editorial Assistant status. Employees who
are designated Senior Editorial Assistants will be informed on a timely
basis. Employees who are not granted Senior Editorial Assistant status
will be given personal and timely notice of steps they may take to
increase the likelihood of achieving Senior Editorial Assistant status.
SECTION 5
All other employees covered by this Agreement will be placed in the
following classification:
Clerk
Clerk/typists, newsroom aides and agate or list clerks who have less
than two (2) years of experience as a clerk will be placed at the first
step of this classification. Employees who have at least two (2) years
of experience as a clerk will be moved to the second step.
SECTION 6
In the Journalist, Technical Specialist, News Researcher and Archivist
classifications, the Employer may recognize relevant experience in other
fields, or advanced education or training, by placing an employee at a
higher step of the appropriate classification than the employee’s direct
experience would otherwise warrant.
ARTICLE 18 – WAGES
SECTION 1
A. Full-time employees will receive the following minimum weekly rates
of pay:
1) Journalists
| Pay step or classification | Per Week | Per Hour |
| 1st step | $820 | $20.50 |
| 2nd step | $946 | $23.65 |
| 3rd step | $1053 | $26.33 |
| Senior | $1217 | $30.43 |
2) Other employees
| Pay step or classification | Per Week | Per Hour |
| Clerk |
| 1st step | $514 | $12.85 |
| 2nd step | $565 | $14.13 |
| Editorial Assistant |
| 1st step | $643 | $16.08 |
| 2nd step | $719 | $17.98 |
| Senior Editorial Assistant | $764 | $19.10 |
| Archivist |
| 1st step | $682 | $17.05 |
| 2nd step | $785 | $19.63 |
| Researcher |
| 1st step | $739 | $18.48 |
| 2nd step | $849 | $21.23 |
| Senior Information Specialist | $976 | $24.40 |
| Technical Specialist |
| 1st step | $771 | $19.28 |
| 2nd step | $908 | $22.70 |
B. For part-time employees with one (1) year or less of service, the
minimum rate of pay will be eighty percent (80%) of the full-time rate
for their classification. The minimum rate of pay for part-time
employees with more than one (1) year of service, but less than the
service specified in the following paragraph, will be ninety percent
(90%) of the applicable hourly full-time minimum rate.
The minimum rate of pay for part-time employees, except journalists,
with more than three (3) years of service, will be the applicable
full-time hourly minimum rate. The minimum rate of pay for part-time
journalists with more than two (2) years of service will be the
applicable full-time hourly minimum rate.
For part-time employees who transfer from a non-journalist
classification to a journalist classification, previous part-time
service will not be counted in determining eligibility for pay parity.
However, it will continue to be counted for other applicable benefits.
For part-time employees covered by the first sentence of this
Sub-section B, hourly minimum rates are as follows:
| Pay step or classification | Per Hour |
| Clerk |
| 1st step | $10.28 |
| 2nd step | $11.30 |
| Editorial Assistant |
| 1st step | $12.86 |
| 2nd step | $14.38 |
| Senior Editorial Assistant | $15.28 |
| Archivist |
| 1st step | $13.64 |
| 2nd step | $15.70 |
| Researcher |
| 1st step | $14.78 |
| 2nd step | $16.98 |
| Senior Information Specialist | $19.52 |
| Technical Specialist |
| 1st step | $15.42 |
| 2nd step | $18.16 |
| Journalist |
| 1st step | $16.40 |
| 2nd step | $18.92 |
| Senior Journalist | $24.34 |
For part-time employees covered by the second sentence of this
Sub-section B, hourly minimum rates are as follows:
| Pay step or classification | Per Hour |
| Clerk |
| 1st step | $11.57 |
| 2nd step | $12.71 |
| Editorial Assistant |
| 1st step | $14.47 |
| 2nd step | $16.18 |
| Senior Editorial Assistant | $17.19 |
| Archivist |
| 1st step | $15.35 |
| 2nd step | $17.66 |
| Researcher |
| 1st step | $16.63 |
| 2nd step | $19.10 |
| Senior Information Specialist | $21.96 |
| Technical Specialist |
| 1st step | $17.35 |
| 2nd step | $20.43 |
| Journalist |
| 1st step | $18.45 |
| 2nd step | $21.29 |
| Senior Journalist | $27.38 |
SECTION 2
Whenever general wage increases and new minimums take effect
concurrently, eligible employees will receive a minimum or general
increase, whichever is greater. All wage increases will take effect at
the beginning of the two-week pay period that includes the effective
date of the increase, as required by this Article 18.
SECTION 3
A. Any pay above the contractual requirements will be considered
discretionary pay, and will be determined by the Employer on the basis
of merit, through performance appraisals. Such appraisals will be based
on demonstrable abilities and accomplishments. It is the Employer’s
intention that employees of similar ability, experience and
responsibility receive equal pay. If discretionary pay pools are
established as provided in Section 4 of this Article 18, it is
understood that some employees may not receive a discretionary pay
increase if their performance lacks merit.
The appraisals may include, but not be limited to, a written annual
performance review. A copy of the performance review will be provided to
the authorized Guild representative, for contract administration only,
provided the employee submits a written, signed and dated authorization
for each performance review that is requested. The appraisals will not
be subject to Article 5.
The Employer agrees to meet with the Guild and/or the individual
involved to consider comments, suggestions and recommendations about the
reviews. However, the Employer is under no obligation to accept those
comments, suggestions and recommendations, nor will those comments,
suggestions and recommendations be binding upon the Employer.
B. The Employer and the Guild recognize the usefulness of timely and
comprehensive evaluations of employee performance. To that end, both
parties agree on principles to maximize the effectiveness of the review
process.
Newsroom management should have available for each job title the
standards and the criteria by which employees will be evaluated. Clear
expectations are key to the review process. The focus of that process is
objective documentation of strengths and weaknesses based on
established standards, not issues of personality and attitude.
Senior newsroom management will seek to ensure that the standards of
assessment of employee performance will be consistent throughout the
newsroom. The review process will apply to all Journal Sentinel
employees regardless of job title or status as part-time or full-time.
The Employer recognizes that managers should receive guidance, training
and education on writing and conducting reviews.
While formal reviews of performance are to be done annually, it is
understood that the evaluation of employee performance is ongoing. There
should be early and prompt discussion of issues between managers and
employees so that the formal performance review process is not a time
when longstanding problems are raised for the first time. The review
process is to be used for dialogue, not discipline, between managers and
employees.
Self-evaluations filled out early in the review process allow
employees to have meaningful input in performance reviews. Managers
should solicit self-evaluations, and employees should complete them, on a
timely basis. Any self-evaluations will be reviewed and discussed
before reviews are finalized by the reviewing editor, senior newsroom
managers and the human resources department.
Reviews will not only include a review of performance since an
employee's last review but also emphasize goals and plans for
development. Assessment of these goals and plans for development should
be ongoing.
Employees who are dissatisfied with their final written performance
reviews can submit written statements to accompany the reviews, and have
them placed in their personnel files.
SECTION 4
Upon mutual agreement with the Guild, the Employer may establish
discretionary pay pools for a specified calendar year or years. The
minimum percentages of discretionary increases to be paid to
bargaining-unit employees from such pools in a given year will be
determined through negotiations between the parties. In the absence of
such agreement, nothing in this Article 18 requires the Employer to
establish such discretionary pay pools.
The size of discretionary pay pools, in any applicable calendar year,
will be calculated on the base pay of all bargaining-unit employees on
the payroll as of the last payroll period at the end of the previous
year. The discretionary pay pools will be calculated separately by
full-time and part-time status. The base pay of any bargaining-unit
employee who terminated or left the bargaining unit after the December
base period each year will be deducted from the discretionary pool base.
Any pay increases other than the amount to bring an employee up to the
applicable minimum or a general increase will be considered part of the
applicable discretionary pay pool.
The Employer reserves the right to pay additional discretionary
increases over and above the contractual guarantees in the form of lump
sum payments. The Guild will be notified annually, no later than Jan.
31, of the names of bargaining-unit members receiving lump sum payments
during the preceding year, and of the amount paid to each individual.
It is understood that discretionary pay will be distributed in
accordance with Section 3. It is further understood that the effective
date of any discretionary increases will be determined through
negotiations with the Guild.
SECTION 5
A. A night differential of eighty (80) cents per hour, for the entire
shift, will be paid to all employees who work at least half their shift
between 5 p.m. and 9:30 a.m. on shifts for which they are not paid the
weekend differential described in Sub-section B of this Section 4.
B. All employees who work at least half their shift on a Saturday or a
Sunday will be paid a weekend differential of eighty-five (85) cents
per hour, for the entire shift.
C. Employees assigned to work as copy editors, page designers, picture
editors, online producers or online designers, on shifts for which they
are paid night or weekend differential, will be paid an additional
production differential of seventy (70) cents per hour, for the entire
shift.
D. The night, weekend and production differentials will be multiplied by
one-and-one-half (1.5) for all hours worked on overtime, on shifts for
which such differentials are paid.
E. A differential of twenty dollars ($20) a shift will be paid to any
bargaining-unit employee who works temporarily, for at least one full
shift, in an excluded position (other than as a Washington Bureau
employee or an intern). This differential will not be paid to editors or
assistant editors covered by this Agreement when they are substituting
for another editor in their operational area. For purposes of this
sub-section, “operational area” is defined as that group of employees
reporting to a manager at the senior editor level or above.
F. A holiday differential of eight dollars ($8) a shift will be paid
to all employees who work at least half their shift on a holiday, as
defined in Article 12, Section 1.
G. Any employee who works at least half a shift after 5 p.m. on
Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve will receive compensation at the rate of
time-and-one-half for the entire shift.
H. Employees are expected to file their differential and callback pay
forms within the applicable pay period. Managers are expected to
process such forms for payment on the next paycheck.
SECTION 6
There will be no reduction in the salary of any employee during the life
of this Agreement, except in those cases where an employee voluntarily
moves either (1) from full-time to part-time or (2) to a lower pay
classification.
ARTICLE 19 – SAFETY AND HEALTH
SECTION 1
The Employer will institute and maintain reasonable precautions for
safeguarding the health and safety of all employees, and recognizes its
obligation in the prevention, correction and elimination of all
unhealthy and unsafe working conditions and practices. It is further
agreed that concerns of employees about their working environment,
including but not limited to the operation of machinery and equipment,
will be promptly addressed. Cleaning materials will be readily available
for employees to deal with dust buildup on their computer screens.
SECTION 2
The Guild will appoint representatives to serve on any committees that
the Employer may establish to deal with health and safety concerns
within the Guild’s jurisdiction.
SECTION 3
Whenever the Employer conducts health and safety tests on equipment or
facilities used by employees within the Guild’s jurisdiction, results of
the tests will be made available to the Guild and to any interested
employee.
ARTICLE 20 – EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE
Employees will be eligible for educational assistance (“the policy”)
under the same terms and conditions as the policy is offered to all
other non-represented employees of the Employer. The Employer may add,
change, and/or eliminate all or part of the terms and conditions of the
policy, applicable to employees covered by this Article without
bargaining with the Guild, as long as any such additions, changes or
eliminations are equally applicable to all other non-represented
employees of the Employer.
ARTICLE 21 – EXPENSES AND TRANSPORTATION
SECTION 1
The Employer will pay all reasonable and legitimate expenses incurred by
the employee in the service of the Employer. Said expenses will be
deemed to include Employer-authorized legal representation as well as
fines and damages resulting from Employer-authorized actions.
SECTION 2
The Employer will compensate employees for the use of a personal
automobile in the service of the Employer at the rate of 29 cents per
mile.
In the event of an increase in the Employer’s mileage allowance, such
increase will apply to employees in the Guild bargaining unit. A
decrease will also apply to bargaining-unit employees, but in no case
will the mileage allowance fall below 29 cents per mile.
SECTION 3
Wisconsin news bureau employees, except those whose work sites are
located in their homes, will be afforded parking arrangements and rates,
and financial incentives to commute by public transit, ride-sharing or
other means, that are no less favorable than those available to
employees of the downtown Milwaukee office.
SECTION 4
Employees are expected to file their travel and expense reports within
ten (10) working days of completing a trip or assignment. Managers are
expected to process the vouchers within five (5) working days.
ARTICLE 22 – BYLINES AND CORRECTIONS
SECTION 1
The supervising editor will determine when a byline or credit line will
be used, but a byline or credit line will not be used over an employee’s
reasonable protest.
SECTION 2
An identifiable employee who is mentioned unfavorably in a letter to the
editor or online reader comment will be informed of such letter or
comment before it is published or posted on a moderated forum, except
when the employee is unavailable and reasonable efforts to reach the
employee have failed. For unmoderated forums, the Employer agrees to
implement a system that will allow employees who feel they have been
unfairly disparaged to report such comments to the Employer for
discussion.
SECTION 3
Retractions or corrections of printed material or material posted online
will not normally be made without notification of the employee
concerned, except when the employee is unavailable and reasonable
efforts to reach the employee have failed.
ARTICLE 23 - MANAGEMENT RIGHTS
SECTION 1
Unless specifically modified by this Agreement, the Employer retains all
rights and prerogatives necessary or appropriate to manage, operate and
conduct the Employer’s activities and services, including but not
limited to the rights to employ, direct the working force and assign
work, schedule work, to discipline or discharge for proper cause, to lay
off, terminate or otherwise relieve employees from duty for lack of
work or other legitimate reasons, to transfer employees, to promote
employees, to prescribe and enforce reasonable rules, to change the
content of jobs, to determine the type, quantity and quality of services
to be provided and schedules and methods for providing such services,
and to sell or lease the business free of liabilities of this Agreement.
SECTION 2
The Employer construes and the Guild recognizes the specific provisions
of this Agreement as the only limitations upon the Employer’s right to
manage its business.
SECTION 3
Notwithstanding anything else herein contained, the Employer may perform
all acts or do whatever may be necessary or appropriate to (1) comply
with any federal or state laws, regulations, or rules which regulate or
which are applicable to the Employer, its employees or its operations,
or (2) to comply with any instructions or directions given by an
examiner or other person pursuant to any such law, regulation or rule.
ARTICLE 24 – NO STRIKE / NO LOCKOUT
SECTION 1
The Guild agrees that it will not engage in, initiate, authorize,
sanction, ratify or support any strike, slowdown or other restriction of
production or interference with any operation of the Employer during
the life of this Agreement. The Employer agrees not to lock out
employees, as long as there is work to be performed within the Guild’s
jurisdiction, during the life of this Agreement.
SECTION 2
No employee will engage in a strike, slowdown or other restriction of
production or interference with any operation of the Employer during the
life of this Agreement or intimidate, threaten or induce another
employee to take part in any such act.
SECTION 3
No supervisor or manager, whether acting alone or as an agent of the
Employer, will intimidate, threaten or induce an employee to engage in
any act intended to interfere with the operations of the Guild.
ARTICLE 25 – GENERAL PROVISIONS
SECTION 1
The Employer agrees to provide bulletin boards suitably placed in the
Journal Sentinel newsroom; all Wisconsin news bureaus; and any of the
Employer’s operations that are within the bargaining unit but
organizationally distinct from the newsroom, for use by the Guild. For
purposes of this section, the term “news bureau” does not include work
sites in government buildings or in employees” homes. In the event any
newsroom operations are relocated outside the newsroom, the Employer
agrees to provide bulletin boards suitably placed in the new location or
locations.
SECTION 2
A. Any written, artistic, pictorial, recorded or other material produced
or compiled on Employer time will be the property of the Employer, who
will control the sale, reprinting or republication of the material in
any and all formats. This includes all employee work product, including
the resale of partial or complete databases and the reproductions of
full or partial pages from the newspaper on items used primarily or in
part for promotional purposes.
B. Except as stated below, the Employer will retain all income from
the sale of material outlined in Sub-section A.
1) When the work of a photographer, artist or cartoonist is sold for
commercial reprinting to any firm other than Journal Sentinel Inc. or
Journal Communications Inc., or other than to any news service in which
Journal Sentinel participates, and not including personal use by
non-commercial customers, fifty percent (50%) of the sale price will be
paid to the individual photographer, artist or cartoonist. Payments will
be made annually.
2) When the work of an individual employee is reprinted in book form
by the Employer or a representative designated by the Employer,
additional compensation will be determined by mutual agreement prior to
publication. If mutual agreement cannot be reached, there will be no
republication. The Employer will notify the employee in writing that he
or she is entitled to have a Guild representative participate in this
discussion.
When the collective work of employees is reprinted in book form by the
Employer or a representative designated by the Employer, the greater of
fifty percent (50%) of net profits or ten percent (10%) of gross
proceeds will be distributed equally among those newsroom employees
contributing to its production.
3) Proceeds from the sale of databases are excluded from these
revenue-sharing provisions during the life of this Agreement. It is
understood that this exclusion is not intended to become a permanent
exception to this section. The Employer agrees to provide the Guild
annually with information about its database marketing progress and
proceeds.
C. This section does not apply in any situation involving material
which is syndicated nationally under contract.
SECTION 3
Any term or provision of this Agreement which is declared by a court of
law or other agency having proper jurisdiction to be invalid, unlawful
or in conflict with the law, will not be enforced unless or until it
will become valid or lawful. However, the invalidity of any term or
provision of this Agreement will not affect any lawful, valid and proper
terms or provisions and all such terms, covenants or provisions will
continue in full force and effect.
SECTION 4
The Employer and the Guild agree to meet at least once per year to
discuss improvements to the cafeteria. In the event cafeteria service is
discontinued, the Guild will recommend options for expanding vending
machine operations.
ARTICLE 26 – EMPLOYEE RECORDS
Files maintained by the Employer which contain information on
individual employees, including personnel files, departmental and
supervisory files, will contain only that material which has or will
continue to have a direct relationship to the employer-employee
relationship.
An employee will have the right to review his or her files as defined
in the above paragraph. The employee will, upon written request, be
provided with copies of all material contained in those files. The
employee will be allowed to place in such files a response to anything
contained therein. The Employer need not honor an unreasonable number of
such requests.
An employee may authorize, in writing, a designated representative to
inspect such files in the same manner as provided the employee. Only
documents that are accessible to the employee or the employee’s
designated representative may be used in disciplinary procedures.
The right of an employee or the employee’s designated representative
to inspect such files does not apply to:
1) Records relating to the investigation of possible criminal
offenses committed by that employee.
2) Letters of reference for that employee.
3) Any portion of a test document, except that the employee may see a
cumulative total test score for either a section of the test document
or for the entire test document.
4) Materials used by the Employer for staff management planning,
including judgments or recommendations concerning future salary
increases and other wage treatments, management bonus plans, promotions
and job assignments, or other ratings used for the Employer’s planning
purposes.
5) Information of a personal nature about a person other than the
employee, if disclosure of the information would constitute a clearly
unwarranted invasion of the person’s privacy.
6) Records relevant to any other pending claim between the Employer
and the employee which may be discovered in a judicial proceeding.
An employee or the employee’s designated representative has the right
to inspect the employee's personal medical files. However, if the
Employer believes that disclosure of an employee’s medical records would
have a detrimental effect on the employee, the Employer may release the
medical records to the employee’s physician or through a physician
designated by the employee, in which case the physician may release the
medical records to the employee or to the employee's immediate family.
Any release of medical information will be consistent with appropriate
federal, state and local laws.
ARTICLE 27 – DRUG AND ALCOHOL TESTING
SECTION 1
The Employer and the Guild recognize that substance abuse is a treatable
illness, and that the preferred response to such illness is education,
treatment and rehabilitation.
SECTION 2
The Employer will ensure that any employee’s substance abuse problem or
suspected problem will be discussed in private and actions taken will
not be made known to anyone other than those directly involved in taking
any action, or required to be involved in any disciplinary or grievance
procedure or Employee Assistance Program referral.
All records pertaining to medical examinations, test results and
treatment will be held with the confidentiality standards of medical
records. No laboratory or medical result will appear in an employee’s
personnel or newsroom files. Information of this nature, excluding
disciplinary information, will be kept in a separate, confidential file.
After an employee completes any prescribed treatment resulting from
mandatory testing, all records of reasonable suspicion, disciplinary
actions and treatment will be removed from the employee’s files. If no
further problems arise in the twelve (12) months following the
completion of treatment, or, for employees who do not go through a
treatment program, in the twelve (12) months following a mandated test,
all records pertaining to testing will be removed as if no testing was
requested or treatment prescribed.
SECTION 3
A. The Employer will continue to provide, at its expense, an Employee
Assistance Program (EAP) that offers confidential counseling to
employees with substance-abuse problems and other personal issues.
B. Voluntary use of the EAP will in no way jeopardize an employee’s
position or future with the Employer. As in the past, requests from
employees for such assistance will remain confidential and will not be
revealed to other employees or managers without the employee’s consent.
Employees who seek voluntary assistance from the EAP for substance abuse
or any other issue may not be disciplined for seeking such assistance.
C. An employee who has a first confirmed positive test, in accordance
with the procedures established below, will be advised by the Employer
of the resources available through the EAP.
SECTION 4
A. Managers and representatives of the Guild, such as officers and
stewards, will be trained, at the Employer’s expense and on the
Employer’s time, in how to recognize symptoms of substance abuse,
document work-related problems, refer employees to the EAP, and in how
the testing program works, including employee rights to Guild
representation. Bargaining-unit employees will be strongly encouraged by
both the Employer and the Guild to participate in a single condensed
training program at the Employer’s expense and on the Employer’s time.
Both forms of training will be offered at least once a year.
B. The Employer will inform employees about the dangers of alcohol
and drug abuse, the availability of treatment and counseling, and the
contents of this agreement.
C. Training programs will be run by recognized substance-abuse
professionals.
SECTION 5
A. Employees will be tested for drugs or alcohol only under the
following circumstances:
1) When at least two managers observe and cite in writing specific
behavioral indicators supporting their suspicion that an employee is
under the influence of controlled substances or alcohol so as to
interfere with his or her work duties. The managers must have been
trained in recognizing symptoms of substance abuse. The basis for their
belief must be written on Reasonable Suspicion Reports, which are to be
signed by the managers making the observations. The objective indicators
will be patterns of behavior or physiological signs, which are
generally recognized by health professionals as being symptoms of
impairment caused by controlled substance or alcohol abuse.
2) When an employee who is driving a vehicle on the Employer’s
business receives a drug- or alcohol-related citation; or is involved in
an accident that causes damage of $3,000 or more and where the driver’s
ability appears to have been impaired, based on observations by a law
enforcement officer; or causes injury to self or others that results in
professional medical treatment.
3) When an employee who is operating the Employer’s equipment or
machinery causes injury to self or others that results in professional
medical treatment. For purposes of this paragraph, “equipment and
machinery” will not include such things as computers, cameras or
communication devices.
4) When an employee is observed by two or more people consuming or
possessing open intoxicants or controlled substances while on the
Employer’s premises. The manager to whom this is reported will document
the incident in a Reasonable Suspicion Report that includes the names of
any observers.
B. An employee refusing a test for drugs or alcohol under this
article may be subject to discipline.
SECTION 6
A. If two or more trained managers believe reasonable suspicion exists,
as defined in Section 5A (1), then Reasonable Suspicion Reports will be
filled out, including statements of the specific objective facts
constituting reasonable suspicion. Each manager will fill out a
separate, signed report. The facts cited will include specific
descriptions of the employee’s work impairment, work performance,
patterns of behavior and physical appearance, with indications of how,
if at all, the employee’s behavior, physical appearance and work
performance differ from what is customary for that employee. If the
circumstances of Section 5A (2), (3) or (4) apply, a manager will
document the incident in a signed Reasonable Suspicion Report.
B. However, if an individual’s behavior poses an imminent physical
danger to themselves or others or is creating or likely to create a
disruption in the workplace, supervisors may complete the Reasonable
Suspicion Reports up to sixteen (16) hours after an order to undergo
testing.
C. Permission to proceed with an order to undergo testing must also
be received from either the Editor, Managing Editor, Employer’s
representative in charge of labor relations or a Journal Sentinel Inc.
officer, although such managers need not observe the employee. The name
of the ranking manager giving permission to order a test (who is
different from the managers completing Reasonable Suspicion Reports)
will be entered on at least one of the Reasonable Suspicion Reports.
D. The employee will be informed verbally that he or she is entitled
to Guild representation.
E. Completed copies of the Reasonable Suspicion Reports will be given
to the employee before the employee is tested, unless the provisions of
Section 6B apply, in which case the copies will be provided within
sixteen (16) hours after an order to undergo testing.
Each report will contain the following statement: “You are
represented by Local 51 of The Newspaper Guild. In order to ensure that
all of your rights are protected in this matter, the Guild strongly
encourages you to send it a copy of this report. Do you want a copy of
this report sent to the Guild? Yes ______ No ______ .”
Upon the employee’s authorization, the Guild will receive a copy at
that time. The employee and, if one is requested and is reasonably
available, a Guild representative will be given a reasonable amount of
time to read and discuss the report.
F. The employee will be given a chance to explain his or her
condition prior to testing. Such explanations will be recorded on a
Reasonable Suspicion Report.
SECTION 7
A. Once a test has been ordered, if the employee wishes a Guild
representative and one is reasonably available, a Guild representative
will be permitted to accompany the individual to the site where the
sample is gathered. Both the employee being tested and the Guild
representative (if he or she is working at the time) will travel to and
from the collection site on the Employer’s time and at the Employer’s
expense.
B. All tests and laboratory analyses will be conducted by facilities
certified by appropriate federal and state regulatory agencies, such as
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Appropriate
chain-of-custody procedures will be used throughout.
C. Employees will be allowed to give urine samples in private.
Samples will be divided into two parts. One part will be sent to a
lab to be tested at the Employer’s expense. The second part will be made
available to the employee who is tested or the Guild. The cost of
testing the second part will be paid by the employee or the Guild. Any
decision by the Guild or the employee not to test the second part is not
an admission of a positive finding and may not be viewed as such by the
Employer.
Employees must be able to observe the samples until the time they are
sealed with evidence tape and placed into appropriate containers for
transport to a laboratory for analysis.
All samples will be retained at the Employer’s expense and maintained
under sample integrity standards as required by U.S. Department of
Transportation regulations until any grievance or arbitration is
concluded. These samples must be made available for retest at the
Guild’s or individual’s expense as part of any grievance or other
administrative proceeding.
D. Alcohol testing will be conducted in accordance with testing
procedures established by the U.S. Department of Transportation.
E. Testing will be performed only for alcohol, amphetamines,
barbiturates, benzodiazepine, cocaine metabolite, marijuana metabolites,
methadone, methaqualone, opiates, phencyclidine and propoxhene
(Darvon). Tests for other drugs, or for other medical or physiological
states or conditions, will not be performed.
The following threshold amounts will be used to determine what is
considered a positive test. Levels below these levels will be considered
negative tests.
| Substance | Screening (nanograms/milliliter) | Confirmation (nanograms/milliliter) |
| Amphetamines | 1000 | 500 |
| Barbiturate | 200 | 200 |
| Benzodiazepine | 200 | 200 |
| Cocaine metabolite | 300 | 150 |
| Marijuana (THC) | 50 | 15 |
| Methadone | 300 | 300 |
| Methaqualone | 300 | 300 |
| Opiates | 300 | 300 |
| Phencyclidine | 25 | 25 |
| Propoxhene (Darvon) | 300 | 300 |
For alcohol, a blood-alcohol concentration of 0.02 to 0.039 may result
in suspension of driving on the Employer's business for the remainder of
the employee’s shift. A level of 0.04 or above may result in the
employee being sent home for the remainder of that shift. A level of
0.04 or above may also result in a referral to the EAP, subject to the
provisions of Sections 8 and 9.
SECTION 8
A copy of the laboratory results will be given to the employee and the
Guild representative.
If the results for the urine sample are below threshold levels, or if
the alcohol concentration is below the threshold level, the test will
be considered negative and the employee will be made whole for all wages
lost and direct expenses, such as taxi fare, incurred during the
testing process. No record of a negative finding will be placed in the
employee’s file, and all references to the test will be removed from all
of his or her files.
If the results for the sample, or the alcohol concentration, are at
or above threshold levels, the results will be sent to a Medical Review
Officer (MRO), who will be a doctor of medicine or osteopathy trained in
pharmacology. The MRO will contact the employee to give the employee a
chance to explain the results. The employee or the Guild may submit any
results from the test of the second part of the sample. However, the
failure of the employee or the Guild to have the additional test
performed or to present the results to the MRO will not be used against
the employee as a basis for discipline, nor will an adverse inference be
drawn in any subsequent arbitration proceeding.
If at this point the MRO believes the test results are positive, the
MRO may communicate the results of the test to the Employer.
SECTION 9
A. If the MRO determines that the test results are positive and so
informs the Employer, the employee may be ordered to go to the EAP for a
treatment assessment. Sick leave and disability leave will be available
for use during treatment under the same conditions as they are for
other health problems.
If the EAP recommends a treatment program, at the employee's request
the Employer will help the employee explore treatment options and/or
provide financial assistance.
B. All discipline imposed under this article will be progressive and
proportional to the infraction.
SECTION 10
Disputes arising from the interpretation, implementation or application
of this policy will be subject to the grievance procedures of Article 5.
SECTION 11
A. Random or mass testing is prohibited, except in cases where random
testing of an individual employee is part of a last-chance agreement
signed by the employee, the Guild and the Employer.
B. Failure to reasonably follow the procedures in this document will
result in the elimination of test results as if no test had been
administered, with no discipline imposed.
C. Employees will not be disciplined for failure to report other
employees for suspected drug or alcohol violations of this policy.
D. Employees will be protected from retaliation if they bring to the
Employer’s attention their reasonable suspicion that a manager is under
the influence of controlled substances or alcohol so as to interfere
with his or her work duties.
E. Employees who are not on duty, and who are called back to work
unexpectedly, are entitled to reasonably excuse themselves from
returning to work if they believe they put themselves at risk of being
subjected to testing. If they do so, no negative consequences will
result from such an excuse.
ARTICLE 28 – DURATION AND RENEWAL
This Agreement will expire Dec. 31, 2011. Either party may initiate
negotiations for a new Agreement no later than May 1, 2011. All terms
and conditions of this Agreement will be extended until a successor
Agreement is signed or other action, consistent with labor law, is taken
by either party.
SIDE LETTER ON WAGES AND PERSONAL DAYS
A. In the event of any conflict between any provision(s) of this side
letter and any provision(s) of the Agreement, the provision(s) of the
side letter will control and supersede the provision(s) of the
Agreement.
B. Effective May 3, 2009, the straight-time wage rate for all
bargaining-unit employees will be reduced by six and six-tenths percent
(6.6%). This wage reduction will remain in effect until the later of
the following:
1) May 3, 2010; or
2) When the wages of all of the Employer’s non-represented employees
are fully restored to the level that existed immediately prior to the
six percent (6%) wage reduction. If the Employer partially restores the
wages for all of its non-represented employees, then bargaining-unit
employees will receive a partial restoration of their wages in the
amount of that percentage of six and six-tenths percent (6.6%) that
equals the percentage of six percent (6%) that was restored to all the
non-represented employees.
C. The wage reductions set forth in Section B above will not apply to
those bargaining-unit employees who accepted voluntary buyouts and left
the Employer’s employ in April or May of 2009.
D. Effective on ratification of the Agreement, employees who did not
move up a step on the wage scale because the prior Agreement had expired
will be moved up to the appropriate step and, also effective on the
ratification date, will receive as a new wage rate 93.4% of the
applicable minimum wage rate listed in Article 18, Section 1, of the
Agreement. Effective on the date of the full or partial restoration of
wages described in Section B of this side letter, these employees will
be advanced to a percentage of the applicable minimum wage rate that
corresponds to the percentage of wages restored for other
bargaining-unit employees.
Thereafter, any employee who is eligible to move up a step on the
wage scale, or who is promoted to a higher classification, will receive
as a new wage rate 93.4% of the applicable minimum wage rate listed in
Article 18, Section 1, unless full or partial restoration of wages has
occurred, in which case the employee’s wage rate will be a percentage of
the applicable minimum wage rate that corresponds to the percentage of
wages restored for other bargaining-unit employees.
E. All full-time bargaining-unit employees will receive ten (10) paid
personal days off during 2009. Part-time bargaining-unit employees will
receive, during 2009, that percentage of ten (10) paid personal days
off that equals the percentage of forty (40) hours that they work each
week. These days must be taken prior to January 1, 2010; they may not
be accrued; and they may not be carried over beyond December 31, 2009.
No bargaining-unit employee who leaves the Employer’s employ will be
paid for unused personal days. In 2010, bargaining-unit employees will
receive five (5) paid personal days with the same terms and conditions.
SIDE LETTER ON WAGE RESTORATION
Section B of the Side Letter on Wages and Personal Days does not allow
the Employer to restore all or part of the 6% wage reduction to a group
(as opposed to all) of the non-represented employees if the purpose of
that wage restoration is to avoid the Employer’s obligation under
Section B to make a like restoration to bargaining-unit employees.
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